Just four days after her shining achievement on the ski slopes, Breezy Johnson is gearing up to hit the snow again.
Today, February 12, she will participate in the women’s super-G.
Johnson clinched Team USA’s first gold medal of the event during the downhill race on February 8. She took to the slopes again recently for the women’s combined team downhill, where she initially recorded a time of 1:36.59, placing her first going into the slalom segment. However, she and teammate Mikaela Shiffrin ultimately finished in fourth.
The women’s super-G event at the 2026 Olympics is set for February 12 at 5:30 a.m. Eastern Standard Time and will take place at the Olimpia delle Tofane Ski Course in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. You can catch it on the United States Network, with streaming available via DIRECTV.
At the last Winter Olympics in 2018, Johnson came in 14th in the super-G, but she has clearly improved. Recently, she took third place in a super-G event in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, just a week before these Winter Games commenced.
Team USA will see three additional skiers in the super-G: Keeley Cashman will go off 18th, Mary Bocock 22nd, and gold medalist Jacqueline Wiles 23rd.
Olympic women’s super-G start time
The final for the women’s super-G starts on February 12 at 5:30 a.m. ET.
How to watch the women’s super-G for free
If you’re not subscribed to cable, consider using a live TV streaming service to watch the Winter Olympics’ women’s downhill events. DIRECTV offers a 5-day free trial, along with various plans starting from $49.99 per month, which includes the USA Network and other relevant channels.
With a subscription, streaming platforms like Peacock are available for catching every Olympic moment. Plans start at $10.99 per month, and if you happen to oversleep this Sunday, you can still watch a full replay of the women’s downhill on Peacock.
Women’s Super-G Start List
- Mallory Blanc (SUI)
- Laura Pirovano (ITA)
- Kira Weidel-Winkelmann (GER)
- Mirjam Puchner (AUT)
- Colin Suter (SUI)
- Federica Brignone (ITA)
- Emma Eicher (GER)
- Esther Ledecka (CZE)
- Sofia Goggia (ITA)
- Cornelia Hütter (AUT)
- Elena Curtoni (ITA)
- Arian Laidler (AUT)
- Kasha Vikkov Rai (NOR)
- Alice Robinson (NZL)
- Romane Miradori (FRA)
- Camille Cerutti (FRA)
- Ilka Stuhek (SLO)
- Keely Cashman (USA)
- Breezy Johnson (USA)
- Laura Gauche (FRA)
- Mary Bocock (ISA)
- Jacqueline Wiles (USA)
- Nina Ortleib (AUT)
- Janine Schmidt (SUI)
- Valerie Grenier (CAN)
- Marina Gasienica-Daniel (POL)
- Elvedina Muzaferiya (BIH)
- Delia Durer (SUI)
- Yulia Pleshkova (AIN)
- Rosa Poholainen (FIN)
- Barbora Novakova (CZE)
- Giordina Caminal Santore (AND)
- Elisa Maria Negri (CZE)
- Cassidy Gray (CAN)
- Francesca Baruzzi Fagliol (ARG)
- Anastasia Shepirenko (UK)
- Mathilde Schwenke (CHI)
- Alyona Ravastova (CZE)
- Nicole Begg (ARG)
- Rebekah Jankova (SVK)
- Alexandra Skorokhodova (KAZ)
- Kiana Kriegiu (KOS)
- Sarah Schleper (MEX)
2026 Winter Olympics
When will the Winter Olympics end?
The closing ceremony for the 2026 Winter Olympics is scheduled for February 22 at 2:30 p.m. ET.



